Excellence in Teaching Award creates leaders
Winners of the Grinspoon Foundation鈥檚 Excellence in Teaching Award receive a $10,000 scholarship to 含羞草研究所鈥檚 graduate programs.
Francesca Fydenkevez, a first grade teacher at Woodland School in Southwick, Massachusetts, has taken on leadership roles nearly from the start of her five-year teaching career, including revitalizing her district鈥檚 math curriculum.
Because her district has a strong partnership with 含羞草研究所鈥檚 , Fydenkevez has collaborated with professors at the College, developing new ways to shift student thinking about math 鈥 work that she says has been incredibly valuable, producing real benefits in the classroom.
So when she received the Pioneer Valley Excellence in Teaching Award in the spring of 2019, Fydenkevez jumped at the chance to take advantage of one of its many benefits: a $10,000 scholarship to Mount Holyoke鈥檚 Professional and Graduate Education division. She鈥檚 using it for the Master of Arts in Teaching Mathematics program and expects to graduate in 2021.
鈥淭his program has already given me new tools to provide richer math experiences for my students,鈥 Fydenkevez said.
The award, given by the in partnership with the , and in partnership with MassMutual until 2019, has honored more than 2,000 teachers in the Hampden, Hampshire and Franklin counties since its inception in 2003, said Sue Kline, director of the Excellence in Teaching Award program.
As the spouse of a teacher and with a lifelong love of education, founder Harold Grinspoon 鈥 a resident of the Pioneer Valley 鈥 launched the award to honor everyday classroom teachers who go above and beyond, Kline said.
鈥淭hese are well-deserving individuals who deserve recognition for the tremendous difference they make in children鈥檚 lives.鈥
The award comes with a variety of gifts, including a cash prize, tickets to an award banquet and a private gala reception, and memberships at the region鈥檚 YMCAs and the Springfield Jewish Community Center.
But the gift of tuition for graduate programs at Mount Holyoke and other participating colleges and universities often comes as an unexpected surprise for recipients, and allows them to achieve dreams they otherwise might not have been able to afford.
For example, said spring 2019 recipient Michael Lawrence-Riddell, receiving the scholarship has allowed him to pursue an aspiration he鈥檚 been mulling over for years. Lawrence-Riddell said he became a teacher nearly 20 years ago partly as a platform to help eradicate systemic racism and racial violence.
When he received the award, he was in his first year of teaching American history at Amherst Regional Middle School, a class with strong potential for reshaping how race is viewed as part of the country鈥檚 broader landscape. Yet, he said, no multimedia tools exist with this specific goal in mind.
His scholarship, along with an additional fellowship in entrepreneurship in education from Mount Holyoke, allowed him to take a leave of absence so that he could earn his Masters of Arts in Teaching, Teacher Leadership. The program is giving him the tools and connections to develop a digital humanities resource for American history teachers that will encourage educators and students to think critically about the role of race and institutional racism.
鈥淚t鈥檚 the kick in the pants I needed to do this thing that鈥檚 pretty huge and risky,鈥 Lawrence-Riddell said. 鈥淭he program has also given me access to this phenomenal community of forward-thinking, progressive, accomplished and experienced educators who are helping me move my ideas forward.鈥
Although Lawrence-Riddell is taking time away from the classroom to achieve his goals, the scholarship also provides a feasible way for full-time teachers to continue to work while pursuing a graduate degree.
Spring 2018 award recipient Emily Shimansky is enrolled in the same teacher leadership program. A former special education teacher at Green Meadows Elementary School in Hampden who now serves as her school鈥檚 math interventionist, Shimansky said she has the typical challenges of a working parent: With a full-time teaching career and two small children at home, time is in short supply. But the scholarship has made it possible for her to pursue a second master鈥檚 degree while keeping her commitments to work and family life.
The two-year teacher leadership program involves only a single academic course per fall and spring semesters, which takes place in the evenings and can be accessed remotely 鈥 a particular asset to Shimansky, who lives in northern Connecticut 鈥 and three week-long summer intensive courses in July. On track to graduate in spring 2020, she鈥檚 currently working on a capstone project that brings together resources on best practices for teacher mentors that could eventually become a guide for her district and beyond.
鈥淭o be recognized by this award is very humbling,鈥 she said, 鈥溾楲eading without leaving鈥 is a phrase that we often use in the program. This scholarship is allowing me and my fellow award recipients at Mount Holyoke to ignite our leadership potential in the classroom while staying authentic to our craft.鈥